Last November there was a Restoration Conference in South
Africa, at which Helmut Bansa was a participant. The proceedings are
to be printed and offered for sale, and three resolutions were
adopted, on 1) the training of restorers, 2) the training of
preservation librarians and of library school students in
preservation, and 3) production of acid-free paper in South
Africa.
Ten archivists from the Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, Brazil,
Curaçao, and Mexico attended an International Archives
Preservation Seminar June 1-5 at the National Archives. The
seminar was designed to give mid-level archivists training in
planning new or improved preservation programs at their
institutions. Members of the Archives Document Conservation Branch
staff served as primary instructors for the program; outside
instructors included Paul Banks of Columbia University and
Ann Russell of the NEDCC. The seminar was arranged with the
assistance of the Society of American Archivists and the
International Council on Archives.
The colloquium on parchment, September 20-22 in Mar-burg,
will include 15 papers by B. Vorst, Claire Chahine, Wolfgang
Wächter, Michael Gullick and others from a total of eight
countries. The proceedings will be published in 1988 in German.
The instructors in the ICCROM course on conservation of paper
objects September 21-November 13 (also given as Sept. 21 to
Nov. 20) will be Gerhard Banik, Margaret Hey, Cathy Baker, Bob
Futernick, Fred Marsh, Brian Ramer, Katsuhiko Masuda and Mogens
Koch.
The Canadian Bookbinders and Book Artists Guild (CBBAG) will
have a fall workshop series at the Canadian Graphic Arts Institute,
19 Duncan St., Toronto: Sept. 25-26, inlay and onlay, and
edge treatment, with Deborah Evetts; Oct. 4, Adam Smith on
tool sharpening; and five successive Sundays starting Oct.
18, beginner's bookbinding with Don Taylor. Nonmembers must join
the Guild to take the workshops. Call Shelagh Smith
(416/851-1554).
Betsy Palmer Eldridge will teach a small class in bookbinding
and conservation next winter, as she did last winter. It will meet
Wednesdays, 10-4 pm, October-May. Call her at 416/967-4589
(Toronto).
A symposium entitled "Conservation in Archives: Current
Dimensions and Future Developments" will be held at the National
Archives of Canada in Ottawa, May 10-12, 1988. It is intended
for conservation managers and heads of conservation labs, and will
cover parchment, paper, photographic records, standards, magnetic
media, future automated technologies, and management. Sessions will
be in English or French with simultaneous translation. For more
information write International Conservation Symposium, P.O. Box
3162, Station D, Ottawa, Ontario K1P 6H7, Canada (613/996-7277).
Yes, the name is now National Archives; it was changed from
Public Archives June 11 of this year.
"Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works on Paper: Symposium
'88" is being sponsored by the Canadian Conservation Institute and
will take place in Ottawa, Canada, Oct. 3-7, 1988. Original
papers are invited on topics relevant to the concerns of the
conservator, scientist, curator, or archivist: case histories,
conservation treatments, materials, and artists' techniques.
Deadline for submission of abstracts: March 31. Information and
registration forms are available from Symposium '88, CCI, 1030 Innes
Road, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0M8, Canada (613/998-3721).
The proceedings of Symposium '86 are currently in preparation,
and it is hoped that they will be ready by this fall. They will be
free to those who registered for the conference and will be
available to others for a cost of approximately $10-$12. No
information has been received about whether there is to be a
symposium in 1987.
The China Technical Association of Paper Industry is planning a
Paper History Seminar in Beijing, China, in early November or
later October 1988. The organizers hope to receive 15-20
participants from China, and the same number of non-Chinese
participants. All papers will be read in English or in Chinese, with
simultaneous translations. The costs are estimated for American
members of IPH as:
$1500 - return trip by air
200 - hotel accommodation at $50-$70/night
250 - meals at $50-$60/day
250 - registration, including trip to Great Wall
Write George Thomas Mandl, who is a council member of the
International Association of Paper Historians (IPH). He is at
Wehrdaer Str. 135, D-3550 Marburg, West Germany.
The Department of Conservation, British Museum, is proposing to
hold a conference on "Former Methods of Conservation and
Restoration" in November 1988. It will cover all materials,
including prints and drawings, from both western and eastern
cultures. Proceedings will be published. Abstracts are invited by
October 31; send to Mrs. H. Lane, Dept. of Conservation, British
Museum, Great Russell St., London WC1B 3DG UK.